balsam

listen to the pronunciation of balsam
Englisch - Türkisch
Türkisch - Türkisch
Bazı ağaçlardan elde edilen, parfüm ve ilaçların yapımında kullanılan reçine
Bazı ağaçlardan elde edilen, parfüm ve ilâçların yapımında kullanılan reçine, belsem
Englisch - Englisch
A sweet-smelling oil or resin derived from various plants
A flowering plant of the genus Impatiens
Something soothing

Classical music is a sweet balsam for our sorrows.

A plant or tree yielding such substance
Canada balsam, a turpentine obtained from the resin of balsam fir
A balsam fir
A soothing ointment
a medical preparation, aromatic and oily, used for healing
{n} an oily, aromic substance flowing from trees, that which gives ease
Balsam is a sweet-smelling oil that is obtained from certain trees or bushes and used to make medicines and perfumes. balm, or the tree that produces it (balsamum, from balsamon). Aromatic resinous substance that flows from a plant, either spontaneously or from an incision, and is used chiefly in medicinal preparations. Some of the more aromatic varieties are used in incense. Balsam of Peru, a fragrant, thick, deep brown or black fluid used in perfumes, is a true balsam, from a lofty leguminous tree, Myroxylon pereirae, native to and introduced into Sri Lanka. Balsam of Tolu (Colombia) is used in perfumes and in cough syrups and lozenges; it hardens with age. Canada balsam and Mecca balsam are not true balsams
A hair conditioning agent extracted from the bark of a firtree, it forms a thin shield on the outside of the hair strand This invisible coating provides support and helps the hair maintain moisture
Anything that heals, soothes, or restores
To treat or anoint with balsam; to relieve, as with balsam; to render balsamic
Resinous product used as a soothing agent
a fragrant ointment containing a balsam resin any seed plant yielding balsam any of various fragrant oleoresins used in medicines and perfumes
An annual garden plant (Impatiens balsamina) with beautiful flowers; balsamine
any of various fragrant oleoresins used in medicines and perfumes
A resin containing more or less of an essential or volatile oil
Water insoluble, semi-solid or viscous, resinous exudate of trees and bushes similar to gum resins
a fragrant ointment containing a balsam resin
{i} aromatic resinous sap; plant or tree which produces balsam
A flower of the genus Impatiens
any seed plant yielding balsam
A species of tree (Abies balsamea)
a water insoluble, semi-solid or viscous, resinous exudate of trees and bushes similar to gum resins
A natural raw material exuded from a tree or plant Balsams are resinous masses, semi-solid materials or viscous liquids and are characterized by their high contents of benzoic acid, benzoates, cinnamic acid or cinnamates
a group of fragrant substances produced by some trees
balsam Canada
Alternative form of Canada balsam
balsam fir
A North American species of fir tree (Abies balsamea)
balsam firs
plural form of balsam fir
balsam apple
A tendril-bearing annual Old World vine (Momordica balsamina) grown as an ornamental for its yellow flowers and orange warty fruits that open at maturity to expose red-coated seeds
balsam apple
a tropical Old World flowering vine with red or orange warty fruit
balsam fir
n. A North American tree (Abies balsamea) having a pyramidal shape and flattened needles. It is widely used as a Christmas tree and yields Canada balsam and pulpwood
balsam fir
medium-sized fir of northeastern North America; leaves smell of balsam when crushed; much used for pulpwood and Christmas trees
balsam of Peru
The thick, brown, aromatic resin of a Central American tree (Myroxylon balsamum var. pereirae) used medically in skin lotions, allergy testing, and cough preparations and in the manufacture of perfumes
balsam of Tolu
The resin, similar to balsam of Peru, of a South American tree (Myroxylon balsamum), used especially in the manufacture of perfumes and medicinally as a basis for cough preparations
balsam of peru
dark brown syrupy balsam from the Peruvian balsam tree used especially in dressing wounds and treating certain skin diseases
balsam pear
tropical Old World vine with yellow-orange fruit
balsam poplar
poplar of northeastern North America with broad heart-shaped leaves
balsam poplar
A poplar tree of northern North America (Populus balsamifera) having ovate leaves and large buds coated with a sticky, fragrant resin. Also called hackmatack, tacamahac. North American poplar (Populus balsamifera), native from Labrador to Alaska and across the extreme northern U.S. Often cultivated as a shade tree, it has buds thickly coated with an aromatic resin that is used to make cough syrups. It grows best in northwestern Canada
balsam willow
small shrubby tree of eastern North America having leaves exuding an odor of balsam when crushed
balsam woolly aphid
a variety of adelgid
Canada balsam
A turpentine made from the resin of the balsam fir tree
balsamic
Producing balsam
balsamic
Having the health-giving properties of balsam; soothing, restorative
balsamic
Having the pleasant odour of balsam; balmy, fragrant

he stood in the road, fragrant with the odor of the azaleas in the undergrowth and the balsamic breath of the low-hanging firs, which were all fibrously a-glitter wherever the moon touched the dew in the dense midst of their shadows.

balsamic
{a} healing, mitigating, unctuous, soft
balsamic
{n} a healing softening medicine
Canada balsam
A viscous, yellowish, transparent resin obtained from the balsam fir and used as a cement for glass lenses and for mounting specimens on microscopic slides
Peruvian balsam
Balsam of Peru
balsamic
of or relating to or containing balsam; "a balsamic fragrance"
balsamic
{s} of balsam, producing balsam; having the scent of balsam (aromatic resinous sap)
balsamic
Relating to balsam
balsamic
of or relating to or containing balsam; "a balsamic fragrance
balsamic
A healing or soothing agent
balsamic
Having the qualities of balsam; containing, or resembling, balsam; soft; mitigative; soothing; restorative
balsamic
A resinous, viscous liquid used to heal or soothe skin
balsamic
heals or soothes inflammation biliary deobsturent- promote the flow of bile bitters- a bitter principle acts on the mucous membranes of the mouth and stomach to increase digestive function, releasing gastrin Useful for treating anorexia, dyspepsia, fever managment, food allergies, gall bladder disease, liver disease hypoglycaemia and late onset diabetes blepharitis- inflammation of the eyelids braycardia- abnormally slow heartbeat
balsams
plural of balsam
canada balsam
yellow transparent exudate of the balsam fir; used as a transparent cement in optical devices (especially in microscopy) and as a mounting medium
peruvian balsam
tree of South and Central America yielding an aromatic balsam
Türkisch - Englisch
balsam, balm
balsam
balsam
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